If so, you're in luck, because with a few (dozen) modifications, you'll have one of the best RPGs made, handcrafted to suit your personal tastes. Maybe you just want your game to look gorgeous, performance be damned. Don't worry, the modding community's got that covered. Perhaps you love everything about the vanilla game, and you just want more.
There's more than a few adjustments you can make to your game to make it every bit as challenging and engaging as the original games.
If you're a hardcore fan of the original games, fret not. With a few mods, many of Fallout: New Vegas' flaws cease to exist altogether. In spite these flaws however, it remains a masterwork in the genre, one that can only be made better through the modding community. Watered down gameplay, dumbing down, and bugs galore are still present. Oh, rest assured, Fallout: New Vegas still has the occasional Bethesda quirks. Fallout: New Vegas managed to be an improvement over its precursor in nearly every way. Rather than being developed by Bethesda employees, the reigns for development were handed over to Obsidian, some of the employees of which had worked on Fallout 2. That's where Fallout: New Vegas, an indirect sequel to Bethesda's take on the series, comes in. Whilst its predecessor managed to do a commendatory job resurrecting the Fallout franchise and bringing it to the attention of the mainstream audience, it left some older fans in the cold. Though the world and characters are very well-written, it still has it's limitations, being a Bethesda game released in the Gamebryo engine.
Created by the hearts and minds that brought us Fallout 2, Icewind Dale, Planescape: Torment and many other legendary CRPGs, it should be no surprise to anyone that it's such a great game. BethesdaReleased nearly four years ago, Fallout: New Vegas was and still is an incredible RPG.